Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T01:41:06.617Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A 14,000 year vegetation history of a hypermaritime island on the outer Pacific coast of Canada based on fossil pollen, spores and conifer stomata

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2012

Terri Lacourse*
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria BC, Canada V8W 3N5
J. Michelle Delepine
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Victoria, Victoria BC, Canada V8W 3R4
Elizabeth H. Hoffman
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria BC, Canada V8W 3N5
Rolf W. Mathewes
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5A 1S6
*
Corresponding author. Email Address:[email protected]

Abstract

Pollen and conifer stomata analyses of lake sediments from Hippa Island on the north coast of British Columbia were used to reconstruct the vegetation history of this small hypermaritime island. Between 14,000 and 13,230 cal yr BP, the island supported diverse herb–shrub communities dominated by Cyperaceae, Artemisia and Salix. Pinus contorta and Picea sitchensis stomata indicate that these conifers were present among the herb–shrub communities, likely as scattered individuals. Transition to open P. contorta woodland by 13,000 cal yr BP was followed by increases in Alnus viridis, Alnus rubra and P. sitchensis. After 12,000 cal yr BP, Pinus-dominated communities were replaced by dense P. sitchensis and Tsuga heterophylla forest with Lysichiton americanus and fern understory. Thuja plicata stomata indicate that this species was present by 8700 cal yr BP, but the pollen record suggests that its populations did not expand to dominate regional rainforests, along with Tsuga and Picea, until after 6600 cal yr BP. Conifer stomata indicate that species may be locally present for hundreds to thousands of years before pollen exceed thresholds routinely used to infer local species arrival. When combined, pollen and conifer stomata can provide a more accurate record of paleovegetation than either when used alone.

Type
Articles
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1 Current address: West Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District, 2701 NW Vaughn St., Portland, OR 97210, USA.

References

Ager, T.A., Carrara, P.E., Smith, J.L., Anne, V., and Johnson, J. Postglacial vegetation history of Mitkof Island, Alexander Archipelago, southeastern Alaska. Quaternary Research 73, (2010). 259268.Google Scholar
Banner, A., Pojar, J., and Rouse, G.E. Postglacial paleoecology and successional relationships of a bog woodland near Prince Rupert British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 13, (1983). 938947.Google Scholar
Banner, A., LePage, P., Moran, J., and de Groot, A. The HyP3 Project: pattern, process, and productivity in hypermaritime forests of coastal British Columbia — a synthesis of 7-year results. Special Report 10, (2005). British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Research Branch, Victoria, B.C..Google Scholar
Barrie, J.V., and Conway, K.W. Late Quaternary glaciation and postglacial stratigraphy of the northern Pacific margin of Canada. Quaternary Research 51, (1999). 113123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bartlein, P.J., Anderson, K.H., Anderson, P.M., Edwards, M.E., Mock, C.J., Thompson, R.S., Webb, R.S., Webb, T. III, and Whitlock, C. Paleoclimate simulations for North America over the past 21,000 years: features of the simulated climate and comparisons with paleoenvironmental data. Quaternary Science Reviews 17, (1998). 549585.Google Scholar
Bennett, K.D. Determination of the number of zones in a biostratigraphical sequence. The New Phytologist 132, (1996). 155170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, K.D., and Willis, K.J. Pollen. Smol, J.P., Birks, H.J.B., and Last, W.M. Tracking Environmental Change Using Lake Sediments. Volume 3: Terrestrial, Algal, and Siliceous Indicators. (2001). Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands. 532.Google Scholar
Birks, H.H., and Birks, H.J.B. Future uses of pollen analysis must include plant macrofossils. Journal of Biogeography 27, (2000). 3135.Google Scholar
Blaise, B., Clague, J.J., and Mathewes, R.W. Time of maximum Late Wisconsin glaciation, west coast of Canada. Quaternary Research 34, (1990). 282295.Google Scholar
Brubaker, L.B., Anderson, P.M., Edwards, M.E., and Lozhkin, A.V. Beringia as a glacial refugium for boreal trees and shrubs: new perspectives from mapped pollen data. Journal of Biogeography 32, (2005). 833848.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calder, J.A., and Taylor, R.L. Flora of the Queen Charlotte Islands. Part 1: Systematics of Vascular Plants, Monograph vol. 4, (1968). Canada Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Carrara, P.E., Ager, T.A., and Baichtal, J.F. Possible refugia in the Alexander Archipelago of southeastern Alaska during the Late Wisconsin glaciation. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 44, (2007). 229244.Google Scholar
Chapin, F.S. III, Walker, L.R., Fastie, C.L., and Sharman, L.C. Mechanisims of primary succession following deglaciation at Glacier Bay, Alaska. Ecological Monographs 64, (1994). 149175.Google Scholar
Clague, J.J. Glacio-isostatic effects of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, British Columbia, Canada. Smith, D.E., and Dawson, A.G. Shorelines and Isostasy. Institute of British Geographers Special Publication vol. 16, (1983). Academic Press, London. 321343.Google Scholar
Clague, J.J., Harper, J.R., Hebda, R.J., and Howes, D.E. Late Quaternary sea levels and crustal movements, coastal British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 19, (1982). 597618.Google Scholar
Engstrom, D.R., Hansen, B.C.S., Wright, H.E. Jr. A possible Younger Dryas record in southwestern Alaska. Science 250, (1990). 13831385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Environment Canada Canadian climate normals, 1971–2000–Normales climatiques au Canada, 1971–2000. (2012). Meteorological Service of Canada, Environment Canada, ([electronic resource] http://climate.weatheroffice.ec.gc.ca/climate_normals/index_e.html)Google Scholar
Fægri, K., and Iversen, J. Textbook of Pollen Analysis. 4th Ed. (1989). Wiley, Toronto, Canada. (328 pp.) Google Scholar
Fazekas, A.J., and Yeh, F.C. Postglacial colonization and population genetic relationships in the Pinus contorta complex. Canadian Journal of Botany 84, (2006). 223234.Google Scholar
Fedje, D.W., (1993). Sea-levels and prehistory in Gwaii Haanas. M.A. Thesis. University of Calgary, . Calgary, AB.Google Scholar
Fedje, D.W., and Josenhans, H. Drowned forests and archaeology on the continental shelf of British Columbia, Canada. Geology 28, (2000). 99102.Google Scholar
Flora of North America Editorial Committee Flora of North America North of Mexico. (1993 +). (16 + vols. Flora of North America Association, Oxford, New York) Google Scholar
Froyd, C.A. Fossil stomata reveal early pine presence in Scotland: implications for postglacial colonization analyses. Ecology 86, (2005). 579586.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galloway, J.M., Patterson, R.T., Doherty, C.T., and Roe, H.M. Multi-proxy evidence of postglacial climate and environmental change at Two Frog Lake, central mainland coast of British Columbia, Canada. Journal of Paleolimnology 38, (2007). 569588.Google Scholar
Galloway, J.M., Doherty, C.T., Patterson, R.T., and Roe, H.M. Postglacial vegetation and climate dynamics in the Seymour-Belize Inlet Complex, central coastal British Columbia, Canada: palynological evidence from Tiny Lake. Journal of Quaternary Science 24, (2009). 322335.Google Scholar
Grimm, E.C. CONISS: a FORTRAN 77 program for stratigraphically constrained cluster analysis by the method of incremental sum of squares. Computers & Geosciences 13, (1987). 1325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, B.C.S. Conifer stomata analysis as a paleoecological tool: an example from the Hudson Bay Lowlands. Canadian Journal of Botany 73, (1995). 244252.Google Scholar
Hansen, B.C.S., and Engstrom, D.R. Vegetation history of Pleasant Island, southeastern Alaska, since 13,000 yr B.P. Quaternary Research 46, (1996). 161175.Google Scholar
Hebda, R.J. Pollen morphology of Ligusticum (Apiaceae) in Canada. Canadian Journal of Botany 63, (1985). 18801887.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hebda, R.J., and Haggarty, J.C. Brooks Peninsula, an ice age refugium on Vancouver Island. Occasional Paper No. 5. (1997). British Columbia Parks, Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Victoria, BC.Google Scholar
Hebda, R.J., and Mathewes, R.W. Holocene history of cedar and native Indian cultures of the North American Pacific Coast. Science 225, (1984). 711713.Google Scholar
Hebda, R.J., Pellatt, M.G., Mathewes, R.W., Fedje, D.W., and Acheson, S. Vegetation history of Anthony Island, Haida Gwaii, and its relationship to climate change and human settlement. Fedje, D.W., and Mathewes, R.W. Haida Gwaii: Human History and Environment from the Time of Loon to the Time of the Iron People. (2005). University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver. 5976.Google Scholar
Hetherington, R., and Reid, R.G.B. Malacological insights into the marine ecology and changing climate of the late Pleistocene–early Holocene Queen Charlotte Islands archipelago, western Canada and implications for early humans. Canadian Journal of Zoology 81, (2003). 626661.Google Scholar
Hetherington, R., Barrie, J.V., Reid, R.G.B., MacLeod, R., and Smith, D.J. Paleogeography, glacially induced crustal displacement, and Late Quaternary coastlines on the continental shelf of British Columbia, Canada. Quaternary Science Reviews 23, (2004). 295318.Google Scholar
Heusser, C.J. Pollen profiles from the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Botany 33, (1955). 429449.Google Scholar
Heusser, C.J. North Pacific coastal refugia—the Queen Charlotte Islands in perspective. Scudder, G.G.E., and Gessler, N. The Outer Shores. (1989). Queen Charlotte Island Museum, Queen Charlotte City, British Columbia. 91106.Google Scholar
Heusser, C.J. Late-Quaternary vegetation response to climatic-glacial forcing in North Pacific America. Physical Geography 16, (1995). 118149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heusser, C.J., Heusser, L.E., and Peteet, D.M. Late-Quaternary climatic change on the American North Pacific Coast. Nature 315, (1985). 485487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, D.A. Stopping rules in principal components analysis: a comparison of heuristical and statistical approaches. Ecology 74, (1993). 22042214.Google Scholar
Josenhans, H., Fedje, D., Pienitz, R., and Southon, J. Early humans and rapidly changing Holocene sea levels in the Queen Charlotte Islands–Hecate Strait, British Columbia, Canada. Science 277, (1997). 7174.Google Scholar
Kienast, S.S., and McKay, J.L. Sea surface temperatures in the subarctic northeast Pacific reflect millennial-scale climate oscillations during the last 16 kyrs. Geophysical Research Letters 28, (2001). 15631566.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T. A late Pleistocene pollen record form the continental shelf of western Canada. Current Research in the Pleistocene 21, (2004). 8789.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T. Late Quaternary dynamics of forest vegetation on northern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Quaternary Science Reviews 24, (2005). 105121.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T. Environmental change controls postglacial forest dynamics through interspecific differences in life-history traits. Ecology 90, (2009). 21492160.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T., and Mathewes, R.W. Terrestrial paleoecology of the Queen Charlotte Islands and the continental shelf: vegetation, climate, and plant resources of the coastal migration route. Fedje, D.W., and Mathewes, R.W. Haida Gwaii: Human History and Environment from the Time of Loon to the Time of the Iron People. (2005). University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia. 3858.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T., Mathewes, R.W., and Fedje, D.W. Paleoecology of late-glacial terrestrial deposits with in situ conifers from the submerged continental shelf of western Canada. Quaternary Research 60, (2003). 180188.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T., Mathewes, R.W., and Fedje, D.W. Late-glacial vegetation dynamics of the Queen Charlotte Islands and adjacent continental shelf, British Columbia, Canada. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 226, (2005). 3657.Google Scholar
Lacourse, T., Mathewes, R.W., and Hebda, R.J. Paleoecological analyses of lake sediments reveal prehistoric human impact on forests at Anthony Island UNESCO World Heritage Site, Queen Charlotte Islands (Haida Gwaii), Canada. Quaternary Research 68, (2007). 177183.Google Scholar
Little, D.P. Evolution and circumscription of the true cypresses (Cupressaceae: Cupresssus). Systematic Botany 31, (2006). 461480.Google Scholar
MacDonald, G.M. Conifer stomata. Smol, J.P., Birks, H.J.B., and Last, W.M. Tracking Environmental Change Using Lake Sediments. Volume 3: Terrestrial, Algal, and Siliceous Indicators. (2001). Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands. 3347.Google Scholar
Mann, D.H., (1983). The Quaternary history of the Lituya glacial refugium, Alaska. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Washington, .Google Scholar
Mathewes, R.W. A palynological study of postglacial vegetation changes in the University Research Forest, southwestern British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Botany 51, (1973). 20852103.Google Scholar
Mathewes, R.W. Evidence for Younger Dryas-age cooling on the north Pacific coast of America. Quaternary Science Reviews 12, (1993). 321331.Google Scholar
Mathewes, R.W., and Clague, J.J. Stratigraphic relationships and paleoecology of a late-glacial peat bed from the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 19, (1982). 11851195.Google Scholar
Mathewes, R.W., Vogel, J.S., Southon, J.R., and Nelson, D.E. Accelerator radiocarbon date confirms early deglaciation of the Queen Charlotte Islands. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 22, (1985). 790791.Google Scholar
Mathewes, R.W., Heusser, L.E., and Patterson, R.T. Evidence for a Younger Dryas-like cooling event on the British Columbia coast. Geology 21, (1993). 101104.Google Scholar
May, L., and Lacourse, T. Morphological differentiation of Alnus (alder) pollen from western North America. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 180, (2012). 1524.Google Scholar
Meidinger, D., and Pojar, J. Ecosystems of British Columbia. (1991). British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Victoria, Canada. (330 pp.) Google Scholar
Pellatt, M.G., and Mathewes, R.W. Paleoecology of postglacial tree line fluctuations on the Queen Charlotte Islands, Canada. Ecoscience 1, (1994). 7181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pellatt, M.G., and Mathewes, R.W. Holocene tree line and climate change on the Queen Charlotte Islands, Canada. Quaternary Research 48, (1997). 8899.Google Scholar
Peteet, D.M. Modern pollen rain and vegetation history of the Malaspina Glacier District, Alaska. Quaternary Research 25, (1986). 100120.Google Scholar
Peteet, D.M. Postglacial migration history of lodgepole pine near Yakutat, Alaska (USA). Canadian Journal of Botany 69, (1991). 786796.Google Scholar
Pisaric, M.F.J., Holt, C., Szeicz, J.M., Karst, T., and Smol, J.P. Holocene treeline dynamics in the mountains of northeastern British Columbia, Canada, inferred from fossil pollen and stomata. The Holocene 13, (2003). 161173.Google Scholar
Quickfall, G.S., (1987). Paludification and climate on the Queen Charlotte Islands during the past 8000 years. M.Sc. Thesis. Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J., Baillie, M.G.L., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J.W., Blackwell, P.G., Bronk Ramsey, C., Buck, C.E., Burr, G.S., Edwards, R.L., Friedrich, M., Grootes, P.M., Guilderson, T.P., Hajdas, I., Heaton, T.J., Hogg, A.G., Hughen, K.A., Kaiser, K.F., Kromer, B., McCormac, F.G., Manning, S.W., Reimer, R.W., Richards, D.A., Southon, J.R., Talamo, S., Turney, C.S.M., van der Plicht, J., and Weyhenmeyer, C.E. IntCal09 and Marine09 radiocarbon age calibration curves, 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 51, (2009). 11111150.Google Scholar
Russell, J.H., and Krakowski, J. Yellow-cedar and western redcedar adaption to present and future climates. Harrington, C.A. A Tale of Two Cedars — International Symposium on Western Redcedar and Yellow-cedar. (2010). U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 6570.Google Scholar
Steffensen, J.P., Andersen, K.K., Bigler, M., Clausen, H.B., Dahl-Jensen, D., Fischer, H., Goto-Azuma, K., Hansson, M., Johnsen, S.J., Jouzel, J., Masson-Delmotte, V., Popp, T., Rasmussen, S.O., Röthlisberger, R., Ruth, U., Stauffer, B., Siggaard-Andersen, M.-L., Sveinbjörnsdóttir, A.E., Svensson, A., and White, J.W.C. High-resolution Greenland ice core data show abrupt climate change happens in few years. Science 321, (2008). 680684.Google Scholar
Stolze, S., Roe, H.M., Patterson, R.T., and Monecke, T. A record of Lateglacial and Holocene vegetation and climate change from Woods Lake, Seymour Inlet, coastal British Columbia, Canada. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 147, (2007). 112127.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., and Reimer, P.J. Extended 14C data base and revised CALIB 3.0 14C age calibration program. Radiocarbon 35, (1993). 215230.Google Scholar
Turunen, C.L., and Turunen, J. Development history and carbon accumulation of a slope bog in oceanic British Columbia, Canada. The Holocene 13, (2003). 225238.Google Scholar
Walker, I.R., and Mathewes, R.W. Late-Quaternary fossil Chironomidae (Diptera) from Hippa Lake, Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, with special reference to Corynocera Zett. The Canadian Entomologist 120, (1988). 739751.Google Scholar
Wang, T., Hamann, A., Spittlehouse, D.L., and Aitken, S.N. Development of scale-free climate data for western Canada for use in resource management. International Journal of Climatology 26, (2006). 383397.Google Scholar
Warner, B.G., (1984). Late Quaternary paleoecology of eastern Graham Island, Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada. Ph.D. Thesis, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC.Google Scholar
Warner, B.G., and Chmielewski, J.G. Biometric analysis of modern and Late Pleistocene cones of Picea from western Canada. The New Phytologist 107, (1987). 449457.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Warner, B.G., Mathewes, R.W., and Clague, J.J. Ice-free conditions on the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, at the height of late Wisconsin glaciation. Science 218, (1982). 675677.Google Scholar
Warner, B.G., Clague, J.J., and Mathewes, R.W. Geology and paleoecology of a mid-Wisconsin peat from the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada. Quaternary Research 21, (1984). 337350.Google Scholar